2019
DOI: 10.1108/jeas-04-2017-0022
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Women directors and firm performance: Malaysian evidence post policy announcement

Abstract: Purpose In 2011, the Malaysian cabinet approved the policy that all board of directors of companies listed on the Bursa Malaysia should consist of 30 per cent women in decision-making positions by the year 2016. The purpose of this paper is to examine the association between the presence of women on the board and firms’ performance following the introduction of the diversity policy. Design/methodology/approach The analysis uses the information of the top 200 Malaysian public listed companies for the financia… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(13 citation statements)
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References 39 publications
(52 reference statements)
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“…The basic knowledge and ability to read, understand, and interpret financial statements will help the board members to better comprehend the complex business transactions and their respective impacts in their decision-making process. This is in line with the conjectures by Ahmad et al (2019), in examining the moderating role of accounting qualifications on the relationship between proportion of women directors and firm performance. In addition, the case of Rolls Royce provides interesting anecdotal evidence on how the lack of accounting and finance representation on the corporate boards contributed to the downfall of the company in 1970's (Mahadeo et al, 2012).…”
Section: Financial Education Backgroundsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…The basic knowledge and ability to read, understand, and interpret financial statements will help the board members to better comprehend the complex business transactions and their respective impacts in their decision-making process. This is in line with the conjectures by Ahmad et al (2019), in examining the moderating role of accounting qualifications on the relationship between proportion of women directors and firm performance. In addition, the case of Rolls Royce provides interesting anecdotal evidence on how the lack of accounting and finance representation on the corporate boards contributed to the downfall of the company in 1970's (Mahadeo et al, 2012).…”
Section: Financial Education Backgroundsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Furthermore, in the wake of various corporate collapses and financial catastrophes, like WorldCom and Enron due to dominance of male directors on board, there has been summons for increasing the participation of female on corporate boards (Handa & Singh, 2015; Higgs, 2003). In addition, the advantages of female directors in terms of providing cognitive diversity, creativity, effective monitoring, decision-making through their higher advisory skills and bargaining power has allured upper echelons of listed corporations to increase the female personnel on boards (Ahmad, Raja Kamaruzaman, Hamdan, & Annuar, 2019). Despite the potential advantages of having women on boards, the corporate boards are still prominently being dominated by men calling for an urgent need to staff the board with adequate number of female members.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, including them on the board may, in turn, help them to be better monitors over managers' decision-making including financial reporting quality and can also reduce the level of conflict and ensure high quality of board development activities (Agyei-Mensah, 2019). However, the positive performance of women on the board will depend on their academic background and not just merely increasing the numbers (Ahmad et al, 2019). Therefore, having women with financial reporting and auditing expertise on the board can enhance compliance with IFRS.…”
Section: Discussion Of Results From Hypothesis Testingmentioning
confidence: 99%